Great Britain: Spring Flowers Face Extinction Due to Climate Change

by steve468 | December 19, 2007 at 09:14 am
1158 views | 7 Recommendations | 2 comments

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Confused by the warmest April on record, a cold, wet summer and a mild autumn, many plants are flowering early. The Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew, which monitors 100 plant species, said at least three quarters were appearing earlier each year. "This year we have lilacs, which are supposed to flower in May, coming into life in November. Our camellias, another spring flower, have also already bloomed." Unseasonal blooms are extremely vulnerable to the hard frosts.
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Barbara McPherson
Barbara McPherson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 10:13 on December 22nd, 2007

steve468, this is more bad news.  What is April in England going to look like ten years from now?  Keep these stories coming and maybe people will start to get that we have a crisis here.

SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:50 on December 28th, 2007

steve468, I like this story. It's good CLIMATE CHANGE REPORT


Very impotrtant that you
improve the environment profile
of nowpublic Canada based newspaper
SHOULD CREATE A SEGMENT
CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS
BUT NOT ONLY PLANTS DIE
IN FRANCE 2003 DIED 15 000 PEOPLE
DURING HEATWAVE, NO WIND NO OXYGEN



Canada arctic ocean:


2007 diminuation of artic ice 25%
FROM 5 MIO sm down to 4 mio sm


 

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